Annulus shaped luminaire
An annulus shaped luminaire includes an annular structure that includes one or more luminous panels, and transition structure that couples a support structure of the luminaire with the annular structure. The one or more luminous panels emit light that illuminates an area adjacent to the luminaire.
Latest ABL IP HOLDING LLC Patents:
This application claims priority to Provisional U.S. Patent Application No. 61/813,731, filed Apr. 19, 2013, entitled “Annulus Shaped Outdoor Luminaire,” the entire disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference, for all purposes, as if fully set forth herein.
BACKGROUNDExisting outdoor light-emitting diode (“LED”) area luminaries are often equipped with individual LED over-optics. The use of individual optics allows for precise control of the distribution and can increase efficiency. However, such optics can also cause the luminaire to appear pixelated in both the on and off state. Further, when energized these pixelated luminaries sometimes provide a substantially direct view of one or more LEDs, which are often very bright, resulting in glare and/or discomfort to the viewer.
SUMMARYIn an embodiment, an annulus shaped luminaire includes an annular structure that includes one or more luminous panels, and transition structure that couples a support structure of the luminaire with the annular structure. The one or more luminous panels emit light that illuminates an area adjacent to the luminaire.
The present disclosure is described in conjunction with the appended figures:
Certain embodiments herein include a luminaire with a circular or an annulus form factor, called herein an annulus shaped luminaire. Such luminaries may be of roughly pedestrian or parking-lot scale, may be utilized in indoor or outdoor applications, and may emit light originating from light-emitting diodes (“LEDs”). Certain embodiments feature a solid or hollow light guide that may be utilized in the annulus shaped luminaries or in other luminaries. Light emitting sources are referred to herein as LEDs, but it is understood that incandescent, fluorescent, organic LED and other light emitter types may be substituted for LEDs without limitation. Also, although LEDs are often perceived as “point” light sources, it is also understood that where suitable for an application, line shaped, tube shaped or area shaped light emitters may be utilized in place of point sources.
Annulus Shaped Luminaire
In certain embodiments, an annulus shaped luminaire is illuminated using one or more back-lit or edge-lit panels so that the LEDs are obscured from direct view, with the light emitted by the LEDs distributed over a net area of one or more luminous panel(s) to reduce glare and increase visual comfort. Presently available LEDs can emit large amounts of light from very small areas, which can lead to significant viewer discomfort and perceived disincentive to utilize LEDs as light sources. However, the luminous panels described herein can spread the light from LEDs across large areas so as to minimize such viewer discomfort. The panels can be engineered to create a plurality of different yet precise light distributions that depend on the specific application. In certain embodiments, the panels may be back-lit, edge-lit, or both.
Annulus light source 105 emits light from one or more LEDs (not shown in
In an edge-lit configuration, LEDs may be positioned within an inner annulus ring 107 and/or an outer annulus ring 106, such that they direct light into annulus light source 105. In certain embodiments, annulus light source 105 can be partially or completely covered with an optional, reflective (e.g., diffusely or specularly reflective) back (or top) surface 108 and/or a diffuse bottom surface 109. Back surface 108 can be opaque to reduce undesirable upward light emission from luminaire 100, instead reflecting the light downward to desirably increase light emission from surface 109. The light from the LEDs can enter annulus light source 105 from the LEDs and exit annulus light source 105 through bottom surface 109. Edge-lit configurations may also include light tubes, as described below. Opening 110 advantageously encourages convective air flow therethrough when heat is generated at inner ring 107 and/or accent light 115, facilitating heat dissipation therefrom.
In either the back-lit or the edge-lit configuration, annulus light source 105 can include optics and/or optical elements that direct light into a specific photometric distribution. The exiting light may or may not be Lambertian; in particular, light emitting surfaces of annulus light source 105 may emit light preferentially in directions where the light is most useful. For example, more light may be emitted in a direction of a pathway or roadway, and less light may be emitted in directions transverse to the pathway or roadway that are less useful to a viewer. In certain embodiments, an annulus is broken into segments that include different light sources and/or directional optics from one another; see, e.g.,
Annulus light source 105 can include other form factors such as a square with an open center, square with a closed center, round (disc) with a closed center, etc.
Accent light 115 can include any type of light source and may be decorative in nature and/or separately controllable from annulus light source 105. That is, in embodiments, the majority of light produced by luminaire 100 can come from annulus light source 105, with a smaller amount of light coming from accent light 115. In this way, the nature of the light (e.g. color, photometric distribution, luminance, etc.) emitted by accent light 115 can be made insignificant as compared to the ambient illumination provided by annulus light source 105 and/or the energy efficiency or net photometric distribution of luminaire 100. (However, in embodiments, when accent light 115 conveys information as discussed below, accent light 115 may momentarily emit a majority of light produced by luminaire 100; e.g., as one or more attention getting pulse(s) of light.) Accent light 115 can have any type of shape, such as a flame shape, a cone, cylinder, rod, simulation of a lantern, etc. As another example, accent light 115 can be clear or frosted. As another example, accent light 115 can include a clear or frosted cylinder surrounding a light emitting device within accent light 115. As yet another example, accent light 115 can produce a visual effect such as flicker and/or other dynamic changes of color, luminance, pattern, etc. Also, accent light 115 may include one or more light emitting devices that may be combined as appropriate to provide a desired accent light and/or information conveying capability. For example, accent light 115 may include LEDs of various colors that combine as appropriate to form a desired output color, may include a high intensity strobe type light emitter that is only utilized for warning situations, and the like.
In certain embodiments, the characteristics of accent light 115 can be used for signaling purposes to convey information, for example to direct individuals to specific locations and/or to represent locations or events. For example, the color, luminance, and/or dynamics of accent light 115 of one luminaire 100 can be unique among a plurality of luminaries 100 to indicate, for example, a location (e.g. airport or mall parking sections), a special function (e.g., emergency call box), a warning or condition (e.g., tornado, flood, tsunami and/or avalanche warnings, parking available or full), a pathway designation, etc. In certain embodiments, these signaling functions can be controlled separately from main light source (annulus light source 105). Brightness of accent light 115 may be customized to an urgency of information to be delivered; e.g., warnings of hazardous conditions may include very bright or pulsating light from accent light 115, but routine pathway designations or parking available indicators may include less bright or steady color changes. In embodiments that convey information, annulus light source 105 and/or accent light 115 may be controlled by control electronics, including without limitation discrete logic, processors, microcontrollers or microcomputers, and the information to be conveyed may be received by luminaire 100 through wired or wireless connections. In yet other embodiments, accent light 115 can be used to create a perceived overall color or color temperature (warm vs. cool) of luminaire 100.
As compared with luminaire 100, of luminaire 200 (and luminous panels 330, 331,
Also shown in
In other embodiments, a reflector (e.g., reflector 655) or a directional optic (e.g., a prism having a reflective surface 765) may be used to direct light into only a single panel. By positioning LEDs in this manner, the LEDs advantageously utilize luminaire structure as a heat sink, allowing for greater wattage LEDs to be used, and/or to increase the efficiency and/or reliability of the LEDs through thermal management.
Hollow Light Guide
A light guide is a general concept of directing light through a medium, be it liquid, gas, or solid, or any combination thereof, using that medium as a channeling mechanism for the light. One example of a light guide is a fiber-optic. Generally, when a light guide is utilized, some sort of mechanism extracts and redirects all, or certain percentages of, the light out of the light guide into specific directions.
In certain embodiments herein, a light guide can channel light from a plurality of LEDs. The LEDs may be arranged in groups, for example in one or more curves or straight lines. These, however, are not the only options for arranging LEDs; for example, LEDs could be located in grids, rectangles or any other regular or stochastic arrangement. The LEDs may be disposed on one or multiple sides of the light guide. The LEDs thus arranged may emit light either directly into the light guide, or could emit light that is redirected by refractive and/or reflective optics into the light guide (as in luminaries 600, 700 discussed above).
Additionally, an advantage of using a hollow light guide (hollow referring to the light traveling through air, through at least part of the light guide) is that air has virtually no absorption of light that travels through it. Acrylic and other “clear” plastics and optical materials generally have small levels of absorption which can add up to significant net absorption along longer light guides. Therefore, since a luminaire (light fixture) is generally designed to provide a maximum quantity of light for a given power input (e.g., not simply getting light to its destination at a perceivable level, such as in communication fiber optics) a hollow light guide may be advantageous. Also, since the annulus shaped luminaries discussed above may benefit from having light spread out over a luminous panel surface, hollow light guides may be an attractive choice for implementing luminous panels of such luminaries.
A hollow guide can be thought of as forming two interacting surfaces, bracketing where the LEDs would reside. In the case of a light guide that essentially forms a horizontal plane, one of the interacting surfaces would be on the top and one on the bottom. Alternatively, if the LEDs were oriented vertically, the light guide might be a vertically oriented plane and the interacting surfaces would be on the sides of the plane. Each of these surfaces can act as “passive” or “active.” In this disclosure, the term “passive” refers to a surface and or material that is image preserving; e.g., surfaces or combinations of surfaces that are substantially flat and act as transmissive and/or reflective surfaces, or a material that is essentially transparent. Conversely, the term “active” refers to surfaces, combinations of surfaces and/or materials having optical features that redirect light in a specific way other than simple transmission and/or reflection. For example, an “active” surface might include optical features such as prisms, an adjacent, diffuse layer (e.g., paint, or a volumetric layer dense with refractive index discontinuities, such as bubbles) or a diffuse or reflective etched surface that controls or redirects light. An “active” material might be translucent or include refractive index discontinuities. In certain embodiments, a light guide may have several layers of passive or active materials, either on a top or on a bottom surface thereof. Layers of active surfaces could be used to achieve desired effects or distributions on either side of a hollow light guide.
For example,
Active surfaces and/or materials of a hollow light guide can provide a variety of functions that depend on the type of feature present on each active surface and/or material. A first reason to create an active surface is to extract a percentage of light along the length of the light guide. This could be done by shaping a panel, sheet, or film, such as acrylic or any other optical material, to provide a refractive element. In such cases, the shaping can cause redirection of light, from piping down the hollow light guide, to exiting the hollow light guide in some defined direction.
In embodiments, another way of providing extraction features is to use a scattering or anisotropic reflective material. Such materials include metal sheets (e.g., steel or aluminum sheets) or transparent or translucent materials that are chemically etched, painted, or both. In such arrangements, an active reflective surface acts to redirect light from inside the hollow light guide through the opposite surface. The opposite surface could be either passive or active, but would need to be at least transmissive such that light could exit. Scattering could occur in one direction, or both, depending on the desired output direction.
A second reason to introduce optical features into a hollow light guide surfaces is to either maintain the direction of light as at least substantially parallel within the light guide (that is, in line to the output of the original light emitters), or to redirect the light so that it travels partially or completely transverse to the initial direction of the light emitted by the light emitters. Features that can perform transverse redirection can be integrated with the extraction features discussed above, or implemented as separate features. For instance, the active scattering reflective material shown in
Similar behavior as that illustrated in
In other embodiments, optical elements such as reflectors, side-emitting over-optics, or other optical elements may be utilized to direct light from source LEDs into a hollow light guide. These approaches facilitate orientation of LEDs in a direction in which their maximum output is not oriented parallel to the direction of the hollow light guide, which may be convenient in certain embodiments.
A very basic embodiment of control system 2200 simply drives LEDs 140 and/or light emitters 142 using a power supply 2240. In this embodiment, all other components shown in control system 2200 need not exist; that is, power supply 2240 can condition external power for LEDs 140 and/or light emitters 142, with no capability for control. A slightly more advanced embodiment of control system 2200 includes user controls 2280 such as, for example, an on/off switch, typically located remotely from the luminaire being controlled.
A further embodiment of control system 2200 utilizes input from sensors 2270 to control operation of LEDs 140 and/or light emitters 142. As shown in
Control logic 2250 may be provided in the form of discrete logic devices, programmable logic devices, gate arrays, microcontrollers, microprocessors, and the like. Controller 2230 may also include memory 2255 for storage of software, operational preferences, operational history or any other information associated with input to (or control or operation of) an associated luminaire. Controller 2230 may also include a real-time clock 2275 to provide time information for use by control logic 2250. Controller 2230 may also include output drivers 2260 as features that are separate from power supply 2240; for example, power supply 2240 may convert external AC power to filtered DC power, while output drivers 2260 selectively gate application of the filtered DC power to appropriate ones of LEDs 140 and/or light emitters 142 under the direction of control logic 2250.
System input/output 2290 represents any form of information provided to or from controller 2230 that is not included in information provided by sensors 2270 and/or user controls 2280. Input to system input/output 2290 could include, for example, information provided by a host computer that receives warnings such as tornado, tsunami, flood and/or avalanche warnings. Output from system input/output 2290 could be information uploaded to a host computer or to another control system 2200, such as information gathered from sensors 2270, history of control status as determined by control logic 2250, operational status of control system 2200 and the like. System input/output 2290 may be provided by wired, wireless and/or optical means. In embodiments, a master control system 2200 may exist at a first location (for example, a central control box, a host computer or a luminaire) and provide output information that is received and applied directly at one or more second locations by luminaries that do not have their own sensors, dedicated user controls, memory, etc. but utilized simplified control logic, power supply and/or output drivers to implement control based on the received information.
Unless specifically stated otherwise, it is appreciated that throughout this specification discussions utilizing terms such as “processing,” “computing,” “calculating,” “determining,” and “identifying” or the like refer to actions or processes of a computing device, such as one or more computers or a similar electronic computing device or devices, that manipulate or transform data represented as physical electronic or magnetic quantities within memories, registers, or other information storage devices, transmission devices, or display devices of the computing platform.
The system or systems discussed herein are not limited to any particular hardware architecture or configuration. A computing device can include any suitable arrangement of components that provides a result conditioned on one or more inputs. Suitable computing devices include multipurpose microprocessor-based computer systems accessing stored software that programs or configure the computing system from a general purpose computing apparatus to a specialized computing apparatus implementing one or more embodiments of the present subject matter. Any suitable programming, scripting, or other type of language or combinations of languages may be used to implement the teachings contained herein in software to be used in programming or configuring a computing device.
Numerous specific details are set forth herein to provide a thorough understanding of the claimed subject matter. However, those skilled in the art will understand that the claimed subject matter may be practiced without these specific details. In other instances, methods, apparatuses or systems that would be known by one of ordinary skill have not been described in detail so as not to obscure claimed subject matter.
The use of “adapted to” or “configured to” herein is meant as open and inclusive language that does not foreclose devices adapted to or configured to perform additional tasks or steps. Additionally, the use of “based on” is meant to be open and inclusive, in that a process, step, calculation, or other action “based on” one or more recited conditions or values may, in practice, be based on additional conditions or values beyond those recited. Headings, lists, and numbering included herein are for ease of explanation only and are not meant to be limiting.
While the present subject matter has been described in detail with respect to specific embodiments thereof, it will be appreciated that those skilled in the art, upon attaining an understanding of the foregoing, may readily produce alterations to, variations of, and equivalents to such embodiments. Accordingly, it should be understood that the present disclosure has been presented for purposes of example rather than limitation, and does not preclude inclusion of such modifications, variations and/or additions to the present subject matter as would be readily apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art.
Claims
1. An annulus shaped luminaire, comprising:
- an annular structure that includes a plurality of luminous panels separated by radial mullions, the luminous panels comprising a light guide; and
- transition structure that couples a support structure of the luminaire with the annular structure;
- wherein the one or more luminous panels emit light that illuminates an area adjacent to the luminaire; and
- wherein one or more of the radial mullions includes one or more LEDs that generate the light emitted by the one or more luminous panels.
2. The annulus shaped luminaire of claim 1, the one or more luminous panels being a single luminous panel circumscribing a 360 degree arc of the annular structure.
3. The An annulus shaped luminaire, comprising:
- an annular structure that includes four luminous panels separated by radial mullions, wherein: a first and a second one of the luminous panels each circumscribe an approximate 60 degree arc of the annular structure and are disposed diametrically opposed to one another across the annular structure; and a third and a fourth one of the luminous panels each circumscribe an approximate 120 degree arc of the annular structure, are disposed diametrically opposed to one another across the annular structure, and are interspersed with the first and the second ones of the luminous panels about the annular structure; and transition structure that couples a support structure of the luminaire with the annular structure; wherein the one or more luminous panels emit light that illuminates an area adjacent to the luminaire.
4. The annulus shaped luminaire of claim 3, wherein
- each of the first and second ones of the luminous panels comprises a first directional optic type, such that light emitted from the first and second ones of the luminous panels is symmetric about a first axis that passes through the first and second ones of the luminous panels.
5. The annulus shaped luminaire of claim 4, wherein
- each of the third and fourth ones of the luminous panels comprises a second directional optic type that is different from the first directional optic type, such that light emitted from the third and fourth ones of the luminous panels is symmetric about a second axis that passes through the third and fourth ones of the luminous panels, the second axis being perpendicular to the first axis.
6. The annulus shaped luminaire of claim 3, wherein
- the first and second ones of the luminous panels form a first pair,
- the third and fourth ones of the luminous panels form a second pair, and
- the first and second pairs of luminous panels emit light from light sources that are different from one another, such that light emitted from the annulus shaped luminaire is of differing luminous intensities from the respective first and second pairs of luminous panels.
7. An annulus shaped luminaire, comprising:
- an annular structure that includes one or more luminous panels, wherein the one or more luminous panels emit light that illuminates an area adjacent to the luminaire;
- transition structure that couples a support structure of the luminaire with the annular structure; and
- one or more non-luminous panels that form portions of the annular structure and are separated from the one or more luminous panels by radial mullions.
8. The annulus shaped luminaire of claim 3, the transition structure comprising an accent light.
9. The annulus shaped luminaire of claim 8, wherein a majority of light produced by the annulus shaped luminaire is emitted by the luminous panels and a minority of the light produced by the annulus shaped luminaire is emitted by the accent light.
10. The annulus shaped luminaire of claim 8, each of the one or more luminous panels including directional optics that direct light from the luminous panels away from the accent light.
11. The annulus shaped luminaire of claim 8, wherein a characteristic of light emitted by the accent light is different from the characteristic of light emitted by accent sources of adjacent annulus shaped luminaries, so as to convey information.
12. The annulus shaped luminaire of claim 8, wherein light emitted by the accent light is dynamically controlled to convey information.
13. The annulus shaped luminaire of claim 11, wherein the information conveyed is one or more of a tornado warning, a tsunami warning, a flood warning, an avalanche warning, and an indication that parking is available.
14. The annulus shaped luminaire of claim 3, the annular structure forming an opening at a center of the annular structure that is bounded by an inner ring, wherein the inner ring:
- bounds the one or more luminous panels at the opening; and
- includes one or more LEDs that generate the light emitted by the one or more luminous panels.
15. An annulus shaped luminaire, comprising:
- an annular structure that includes one or more luminous panels, at least one of the one or more luminous panels comprising a hollow light guide; and
- transition structure that couples a support structure of the luminaire with the annular structure;
- wherein the one or more luminous panels emit light that illuminates an area adjacent to the luminaire.
16. An annulus shaped luminaire, comprising:
- an annular structure that includes one or more luminous panels; and
- transition structure that couples a support structure of the luminaire with the annular structure;
- wherein the one or more luminous panels emit light that illuminates an area adjacent to the luminaire;
- at least one of the one or more luminous panels comprising directional optics such that the area that is illuminated adjacent to the luminaire is asymmetric with respect to the support structure.
17. The annulus shaped luminaire of claim 15, the transition structure comprising an accent light.
18. The annulus shaped luminaire of claim 17, wherein a majority of light produced by the annulus shaped luminaire is emitted by the luminous panels and a minority of the light produced by the annulus shaped luminaire is emitted by the accent light.
19. The annulus shaped luminaire of claim 17, each of the one or more luminous panels including directional optics that direct light from the luminous panels away from the accent light.
20. The annulus shaped luminaire of claim 17, wherein a characteristic of light emitted by the accent light is different from the characteristic of light emitted by accent sources of adjacent annulus shaped luminaries, so as to convey information.
21. The annulus shaped luminaire of claim 17, wherein light emitted by the accent light is dynamically controlled to convey information.
22. The annulus shaped luminaire of claim 21, wherein the information conveyed is one or more of a tornado warning, a tsunami warning, a flood warning, an avalanche warning, and an indication that parking is available.
23. The annulus shaped luminaire of claim 15, the annular structure forming an opening at a center of the annular structure that is bounded by an inner ring, wherein the inner ring:
- bounds the one or more luminous panels at the opening; and
- includes one or more LEDs that generate the light emitted by the one or more luminous panels.
D191128 | August 1961 | Curtin et al. |
D192125 | January 1962 | Lasker |
D199077 | September 1964 | Turner |
D199078 | September 1964 | Turner et al. |
D199999 | January 1965 | Simon |
D200001 | January 1965 | Simon |
D200214 | February 1965 | Simon |
3218446 | November 1965 | Langer |
D341221 | November 9, 1993 | Elazari |
D407842 | April 6, 1999 | Landefeld |
6443582 | September 3, 2002 | Tarne et al. |
7160010 | January 9, 2007 | Chinniah et al. |
D571494 | June 17, 2008 | Friedman et al. |
D571496 | June 17, 2008 | Lenz |
D574103 | July 29, 2008 | Minami et al. |
D578694 | October 14, 2008 | Zeng et al. |
D583494 | December 23, 2008 | Friedman et al. |
D591884 | May 5, 2009 | Tortel |
D597696 | August 4, 2009 | Sabernig |
D599496 | September 1, 2009 | Lodhie |
D599935 | September 8, 2009 | van Klinken |
D601291 | September 29, 2009 | Nankil |
D614789 | April 27, 2010 | van Klinken |
D615682 | May 11, 2010 | van Klinken |
D616130 | May 18, 2010 | Tortel |
D623337 | September 7, 2010 | Zheng |
D624228 | September 21, 2010 | Nankil |
D627910 | November 23, 2010 | Fazzari |
D652976 | January 24, 2012 | Soto et al. |
D672074 | December 4, 2012 | Compton |
D679042 | March 26, 2013 | Yu |
D725304 | March 24, 2015 | Nelson et al. |
D725305 | March 24, 2015 | Nelson et al. |
20090129121 | May 21, 2009 | Yoneda |
20090316436 | December 24, 2009 | Takahashi et al. |
20100014290 | January 21, 2010 | Wilcox |
20130003409 | January 3, 2013 | Vissenberg et al. |
20130201683 | August 8, 2013 | Kirchberger et al. |
- Hess America, Agena 720 LED Specification, web page retrieved from the internet http://www.hessamerica.com/Products/Lighting/Pole—Mounted—Luminaire/AGENA/, Aug. 19, 2014, 4 pages.
- Hess America, Avalon 650 Specification, web page retrieved from the internet http://www.hessamerica.com/Products/Lighting/Pole—Mounted—Luminaire/AVALON/ , Aug. 19, 2014, 4 pages.
- Louis Poulsen Ughting; Albertslund Maxi Post Product Spectfication, web page retrieved www.louispoulsen.com on Aug. 19, 2014, 3 pages.
- Selux, Astro 2—flat glass SX 1182 11-9, web page retrieved from www.selux.com on Aug. 19, 2014 bearing copyright date of Apr. 2014, 2 pages.
- Selux, Saturn 5 SX 470 72-9, web page retrieved from www.selux.com on Aug. 19, 2014 bearing copyright date of Sep. 2013, 2 pages.
- Selux, Exterior catalogue, (selected pages) retrieved from www.selux.com on Aug. 27, 2014 bearing copyright date of 2014, pt. 1, 28 pages.
- Selux, Exterior catalogue, (selected pages) retrieved from www.selux.com on Aug. 27, 2014 bearing copyright date of 2014, pt. 2, 27 pages.
- Selux, Exterior catalogue, (selected pages) retrieved from www.selux.com on Aug. 27, 2014 bearing copyright date of 2014, pt. 3, 32 pages.
- Selux, Exterior catalogue, (selected pages) retrieved from www.selux.com on Aug. 27, 2014 bearing copyright date of 2014, pt. 4, 23 pages.
- Lithonia Lighting, Ratio Post Top 1.52 TLPRO152 LED Area Luminaire, web page retrieved from www.lithnia.com on Aug. 19, 2014 bearing copyright date of 2013, 3 pages.
- Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 29/488,564, mailed Nov. 10, 2014.
- Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 29/488,562, mailed Nov. 14, 2014.
Type: Grant
Filed: Apr 21, 2014
Date of Patent: Dec 29, 2015
Patent Publication Number: 20140313765
Assignee: ABL IP HOLDING LLC (Conyers, GA)
Inventors: Peter K. Nelson (Denver, CO), Carl T. Gould (Golden, CO), Kevin Franklin Leadford (Evergreen, CO), Christopher D. Slaughter (Denver, CO), Christopher J. Sorensen (Denver, CO)
Primary Examiner: Laura Tso
Application Number: 14/257,585
International Classification: F21K 99/00 (20100101); F21V 8/00 (20060101); F21S 8/08 (20060101); F21V 5/08 (20060101); F21Y 101/02 (20060101); F21Y 103/02 (20060101);